Anger in China at brutality in chemical plant protests

BEIJING (Reuters) - Protests against a proposed chemical plant in the southern Chinese province of Guangdong spread to the provincial capital on Tuesday, even as authorities signalled they may back down on construction plans in attempt to head off more unrest.

A man (C) raises a placard which reads, "Oppose PX (paraxylene petrochemicals), give me back my pure land", as he and other residents protest against a chemical plant project in Maoming, Guangdong province March 31, 2014. REUTERS/Stringer

Public anger has grown since graphic photos surfaced on Chinese social networks early this week, showing demonstrators in the nearby city of Maoming - the location of the proposed plant - lying bloodied on the streets as rows of paramilitary police marched in formation.

The images of violence - which could not be independently verified by Reuters - have caused an outcry on Chinese social media, though many were later removed by censors.

On Sunday, hundreds of Maoming residents poured into the streets protesting against the plant producing paraxylene, a petrochemical used in making fabric and plastic bottles, and environmental degradation.

Protesters in the provincial capital, Guangzhou, on Tuesday renewed calls for an end to the chemical plant project, as well as justice for those who they believe were hurt or killed at the hands of paramilitary police on Sunday.

The government said no one was killed in demonstrations on Sunday and Monday, and did not mention whether anyone was hurt. Two protesters disputed the claim, telling Reuters that several people were killed and dozens hurt, though they did not know the exact number of casualties.

“The provincial government has a responsibility to address this,” said one protester by telephone, declining to be named because of the sensitivity of the matter. “It’s not right that the paramilitary police can injure or beat people to death. It violates our most basic interests as citizens.”

Photos obtained by Reuters showed tear gas being fired at demonstrators on Monday.

Hundreds demonstrated at Guangzhou’s Sun Yat Sen Memorial Hall early in the day, witnesses said, but no more than a few dozen were left by the afternoon. There was no violence during Tuesday’s protest, they said, though many police surrounded the demonstration.

“We will renew our demands until this matter is resolved - our first goal is for the paraxylene project to be cancelled,” another demonstrator, surnamed Liang, said by telephone. “Second, we must find out who commanded the murderers to beat people to death - we must know the truth.”

China’s Ministry of Public Security did not respond to requests for comment.

GOVERNMENT VOWS TO LISTEN

In an online statement posted late on Tuesday, the government of Maoming said a timeline had not been set for the project, which is still far from being approved.

“We reiterate that this project is still under scientific study, and until the public has reached a full consensus it will not start,” it said.

The city had previously called the protests a “grave violation” by criminals causing chaos.

Maoming police said in a separate statement they would “rigorously safeguard social stability” and pursue “a small number of criminals” who had damaged public property after the city announced its plans for the chemical plant.

The plant would be owned by the local government and state-controlled Sinopec Corp, China’s biggest refiner.

The influential tabloid the Global Times, run by the Communist Party’s official People’s Daily, said in an editorial on Tuesday that the government had to break the “vicious spiral” of public opposition to PX plants, which were needed to lessen Chinese reliance on imports.

The eastern city of Ningbo suspended a petrochemical project after days of demonstrations in November 2012, and protests forced the suspension of a paraxylene plant in the northeastern city of Dalian the year before. A similar demonstration took place in the southern city of Kunming last year.

Choking smog blankets many Chinese cities, and environmental degradation, the cost of the country’s breakneck economic growth, has earned the ire of an increasingly educated and affluent urban class.